A patient asks ChatGPT something like "ketamine therapy for depression near me" or "is IV ketamine safe for anxiety," and the answer engine responds with a short explanation followed by a small number of named clinics or a suggestion to search a directory. Your clinic gets named when your website, reviews, and listings clearly answer the specific question the patient asked, using language that matches how patients actually describe their symptoms and treatment interest. If that language and structure are missing, ChatGPT defaults to naming larger, better-documented providers or generic directories instead.
This is a different discovery path than the one most ketamine and psychedelic therapy clinics have built their websites around. Search engine optimization (SEO) was built for keyword matching and ranked blue links. Generative engine optimization (GEO) and answer engine optimization (AEO) are about being the clear, well-supported answer inside a conversation. Understanding how that conversation unfolds is the first step to showing up in it.
The kinds of questions patients type about ketamine treatment
Patients rarely open ChatGPT by typing a clinic name. They type the question they are afraid to ask a doctor out loud: whether ketamine therapy works for their specific condition, what a session feels like, what it costs, whether it is safe with their current medications, and only then whether there is a provider near them. Clinic-name questions come last, after trust in the treatment itself has been established.
This ordering matters because ChatGPT tends to build its answer in the same sequence the patient is thinking in. A first message about "does ketamine help treatment-resistant depression" produces an educational answer. A follow-up message narrowing to a city or region is what triggers ChatGPT to surface specific clinics. If your website only answers the second question and never the first, ChatGPT has less reason to associate your name with the entire conversation, including the moment a location gets specified.
Clinics that publish clear, plain-language answers to the early-stage questions, such as what conditions ketamine is used for, how IV ketamine differs from at-home nasal spray options, and what a typical course of sessions involves, give ChatGPT material to draw from earlier in the conversation. That earlier presence increases the likelihood of being remembered and named once the patient asks about a specific city or neighborhood.
What sources ChatGPT pulls from when naming clinics
ChatGPT does not maintain a private list of ketamine clinics. When it names providers, it is drawing on a mix of your website content, third-party health directories, review platforms, local business listings, and general web mentions of your clinic that it has been trained on or can retrieve during the conversation. The more consistent and detailed those sources are about what you offer, where you are located, and who you treat, the more confidently ChatGPT can attach your name to a patient's question.
Inconsistency across these sources is one of the most common reasons a real, established clinic gets skipped over in favor of a competitor with a smaller footprint. If your website lists one set of services, your Google Business Profile lists another, and a health directory has your address or phone number wrong, ChatGPT has conflicting signals to reconcile. Faced with that conflict, it tends to favor whichever source is clearest and most complete, even if that source belongs to a competitor.
Clinics that keep their name, address, phone number, services offered, and conditions treated aligned across their website, directory listings, and review platforms give ChatGPT a single, coherent picture to work from. That alignment is a larger factor in whether you get named than any single piece of content on your own site.
Why your website wording changes whether you are mentioned
ChatGPT favors clinic websites that state, in plain language, what conditions are treated, what the treatment process involves, and who is qualified to deliver it, because that wording maps directly onto how patients phrase their questions. A page that only says "innovative infusion therapy" without naming depression, anxiety, PTSD, or chronic pain gives the model far less to match against a patient's specific concern than a page that names those conditions directly.
The same principle applies to logistics. Patients ask about session length, number of visits typically recommended, what monitoring looks like during an infusion, and whether a psychiatric evaluation is required beforehand. A clinic website that answers these operational questions in ordinary language, rather than assuming a phone call will cover it, gives ChatGPT concrete material to quote or summarize when a patient asks a related question.
This is also where inline definitions matter for the reader as much as for the model. If your site mentions "ketamine-assisted psychotherapy" or "dissociative anesthetic," a brief plain-language explanation next to the term helps both a nervous first-time patient and an AI engine understand exactly what you offer and to whom. Clinics that write for the patient's actual vocabulary, rather than clinical shorthand, tend to be the ones ChatGPT quotes back almost verbatim.
How to test what ChatGPT says about your area today
You can find out exactly how ChatGPT currently talks about ketamine therapy in your area by asking it the same questions a prospective patient would, using a normal free or paid ChatGPT account with no special access required. This costs nothing but a few minutes and tells you precisely where you stand before you change anything on your website or listings.
Start broad, then narrow, the way a real patient would. Ask "what is ketamine therapy used for," then "is ketamine therapy safe," then move to location: "ketamine therapy clinics in your city" and "IV ketamine clinic near your neighborhood or landmark." Note whether your clinic is named, what is said about it, and whether the details match what is actually true about your services, hours, and location.
Repeat this test periodically and pay attention to which competitors get named consistently. If a competitor with a similar service area comes up every time and you do not, compare their website's plain-language descriptions of conditions treated and treatment logistics against your own. The gap is often visible within a few minutes of reading.
How to check your own progress without waiting on anyone else
You do not need a third party to tell you whether this is working. Open ChatGPT yourself, ask the same handful of patient-style questions about ketamine therapy in your city, and read the answer the way a nervous, symptomatic patient would read it. Check whether your clinic is named, whether the description is accurate, and whether the conditions and logistics mentioned match your actual practice.
Do this on a regular schedule, such as monthly, and keep a simple written or spreadsheet record of the exact questions you asked and what came back each time. Compare answers month over month rather than relying on a single check. If your name starts appearing more consistently, or the description of your services becomes more accurate and detailed, that is direct evidence of progress you observed yourself, in the same tool your patients are using.